The doctors pooled their Veterans’ benefits in order to obtain a construction loan, and the first building of the St. The Dispatch reported that they were all married, all trained at the U of M, were between the ages of 30 and 34, and had a total of 25 children. The project was started by a group of WWII Veterans, who had all been working at the Veterans Hospital, each with a different specialty. Morten Arneson agreed to give a group of (then)10 doctors a 99-year lease for the western portion of his three-acre nursery, including a 100-ft. On June 28, 1950, the Dispatch announced the beginning of the St. Webber jumped at the chance to start a medical practice in the suburbs, but the deal fell through. In 1949, Nick Phillips had contemplated building a medical center at his site at the Lilac Way Shopping Center, and Surgeon Richard J. That account was written by one of the original doctors, Dr. 2, 1989 (on file at the SLP Historical Society). There is also an account in “An Historical Review of Park Nicollet Medical Center” in the Park Nicollet Medical Foundation “The Bulletin,” Vol. The whole story is in the book Managing Change, Changing Medicine, by James R. The following are just some high points in the development of Park Nicollet Medical Center.
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